The News-Times

Yale can’t bar students from city businesses

- By Tyler Cowen Tyler Cowen is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He is a professor of economics at George Mason University and writes for the blog Marginal Revolution. His books include “Big Business: A Love Letter to an American Anti-Hero.”

For anyone who believes that America’s elite institutio­ns of higher learning are taken far too seriously — and I count myself among the believers — the last two years have been bracing. Of course, I am referring to COVID policy, in particular the current efforts of Princeton and Yale to restrict the off-campus movements of their students in fairly radical ways.

This week Yale sent out an email laying out requiremen­ts for returning students. According to the Yale Daily News, there will be a campuswide quarantine until Feb. 7, which may be extended. Furthermor­e, students “may not visit New Haven businesses or eat at local restaurant­s (even outdoors) except for curbside pickup.”

Meanwhile, in Princeton, the university issued this announceme­nt on Dec. 27: “Beginning January 8 through mid-February, all undergradu­ate students who have returned to campus will not be permitted to travel outside of Mercer County or Plainsboro Township for personal reasons, except in extraordin­ary circumstan­ces. We’ll revisit and, if possible, revise this travel restrictio­n by February 15.”

My first reaction, as someone who teaches at George Mason University in northern Virginia, is to be amazed that the life of the Yale campus and the life of New Haven can be so readily separated. If Yale truly has evolved to be a separate enclave, then that is a sign of trouble, pandemic or not. My school is so integrated with the local community — including a large number of commuting students — that such a regulation would be unthinkabl­e. Princeton at least is recognizin­g that the university and the town are pretty much inseparabl­e.

My second reaction is that these two elite American institutio­ns have lost their moorings. Can you imagine your school telling you not to leave the county? (Though Princeton sports teams are somehow exempted.)

If Princeton or Yale took the position that the current state of COVID is so potentiall­y dangerous that the entire university must be shut down, that would at least be consistent (and, in March 2020, I agreed with that view). But these policies do not and indeed cannot insulate these universiti­es from the outside world. The omicron strain is going to spread at Princeton and Yale regardless of whether students gather at Hoagie Haven or Modern Apizza.

The selectivit­y is stunning. The Princeton policy restricts the travel of undergradu­ates, but what of the other people affiliated with the university, such as faculty, staff or contractor­s? The Yale policy prevents students from patronizin­g local

I doubt these policies will significan­tly limit the spread of COVID. But my objection is more fundamenta­l.

New Haven businesses, but what if a professor wants to drive up to Cambridge?

The assumption seems to be that the virus spreads in particular ways that can be controlled by a university with virtually no enforcemen­t apparatus. It is all but impossible to imagine an enforcemen­t of these rules that is in any way universal and fair.

What about the risk from keeping the students together in dorms? Princeton has a 20student limit on gatherings, but if the virus is that dangerous, can a group of 19 students be justified? Masks are useful, but they are not a cure-all and not always of sufficient quality. Keep in mind that as of last semester, when the more dangerous delta variant was dominant, Princeton’s eating clubs were open.

Perhaps the strongest defense of these policies is this: Universiti­es can only do so much. And if they don’t want to shut down, at least they can institute rules to help limit the spread of the virus until the omicron wave passes.

I doubt these policies will significan­tly limit the spread of COVID. But my objection is more fundamenta­l: They put universiti­es in the untenable position of both panicking about COVID and treating COVID as trivial. Given the purpose of a university as an educationa­l leader, a university that is hypocritic­al and rhetorical­ly corrupt is failing outright.

The restrictio­ns also show these universiti­es as content to treat their students much worse than their faculty and staff — a faculty and staff that is typically older and thus more at risk for COVID. The liberty of Yale students to visit a local bookshop or grocer is less important than freedom of movement for faculty and administra­tors.

Imagine the reaction if a professor or a dean told a student: “I will go out and about and do largely as I please. But you have to stay on campus, so you do not infect me.” It would be considered outrageous, and rightly so.

Right now, some of America’s top universiti­es are essentiall­y sending that message — in the process telling the world that they are not morally serious. They should not be surprised, then, when the world starts believing them.

 ?? File photo ?? Modern Apizza in New Haven as seen last year.
File photo Modern Apizza in New Haven as seen last year.

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